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4.1.1 The \paper
block
\paper
blocks may be placed in three different places to form
a descending hierarchy of \paper
blocks:
-
At the top of the input file, before all
\book
,\bookpart
, and\score
blocks. -
Within a
\book
block but outside all the\bookpart
and\score
blocks within that book. -
Within a
\bookpart
block but outside all\score
blocks within that bookpart.
A \paper
block cannot be placed within a \score
block.
The values of the fields filter down this hierarchy, with the values set higher in the hierarchy persisting unless they are over-ridden by a value set lower in the hierarchy.
Several \paper
blocks can appear at each of the levels, for
example as parts of several \include
d files. If so, the
fields at each level are merged, with values encountered last taking
precedence if duplicated fields appear.
Settings that can appear in a \paper
block include:
-
the
set-paper-size
scheme function, -
\paper
variables used for customizing page layout, and - markup definitions used for customizing the layout of headers, footers, and titles.
The set-paper-size
function is discussed in the next
section, Paper size and automatic scaling. The
\paper
variables that deal with page layout are discussed
in later sections. The markup definitions that deal with headers,
footers, and titles are discussed in
Custom titles headers and footers.
Most \paper
variables will only work in a \paper
block. The few that will also work in a \layout
block are
listed in The \layout
block.
Except when specified otherwise, all \paper
variables that
correspond to distances on the page are measured in millimeters,
unless a different unit is specified by the user. For example,
the following declaration sets top-margin
to ten
millimeters:
\paper { top-margin = 10 }
To set it to 0.5
inches, use the \in
unit suffix:
\paper { top-margin = 0.5\in }
The available unit suffixes are \mm
, \cm
,
\in
, and \pt
. These units are simple values for
converting from millimeters; they are defined in
‘ly/paper-defaults-init.ly’. For the sake of clarity, when
using millimeters, the \mm
is typically included in the
code, even though it is not technically necessary.
It is also possible to define \paper
values using Scheme.
The Scheme equivalent of the above example is:
\paper { #(define top-margin (* 0.5 in)) }
See also
Notation Reference:
Paper size and automatic scaling,
Custom titles headers and footers,
The \layout
block.
Installed Files: ‘ly/paper-defaults-init.ly’.
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